Mark Pougatch

Mark Pougatch (born 27 January 1968, in London) is a freelance radio and television broadcaster, a journalist and author who works mainly as a sports presenter for BBC Radio 5 Live. Pougatch is also current the chief presenter for ITV Sport, replacing Adrian Chiles.

Early life

Born in Mambia, Guinea in 1968, Pougatch attended Malvern College[1] where he was captain of the First XI cricket team[2] and graduated with a degree in politics at the University of Durham where he was a member of Hatfield College. He then undertook a post-graduate diploma in Broadcast Journalism at the London College of Printing.

Broadcasting career

He initially worked for six months at the former BBC radio station for London, BBC GLR. He then became a regular football reporter in 1992 with BBC Essex.

In 1998, he joined BBC Radio 5 Live, selected to be the main presenter of 5 Live Sport on Sundays. In August 2000, he switched to the Saturday edition of the show. Pougatch has presented coverage of the IPL cricket and the African Cup of Nations for ITV.

Pougatch continues to present editions of 5 Live Sport.[3] He also presents Football Today on Premier League TV on Monday and Thursday throughout the Football season. On 23 January 2015, it was announced that he would replace Adrian Chiles as the main presenter of ITV's football coverage, with immediate effect.[4]

In March 2012, he won the Sports Journalists' Association award for Sports Broadcaster of the Year.[5]

Other activities

Pougatch joined the team of Football Superstars, a game which was due to be released in 2009 as an innovative MMORPG game integrating gameplay with footballer's lifestyles. He is the author of Three Lions Versus the World: England's World Cup Stories from the Men Who Were There.[6] He is also a speaker, after dinner and at daytime events.[7]

Personal life

Pougatch is married to Lady Victoria Scott, the younger daughter of the 5th Earl of Eldon,.[8] They live in Oxfordshire with their three children. His grandfather[9] and great-grandfather were among the diaspora who escaped Ukraine amid the violence that followed the first Russian Revolution.[10]

References

External links

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